Shoei’s versatile adventure/dual-sports helmet: the Shoei Hornet ADV

Introduction

The Shoei Hornet ADV is successor to the well-regarded Shoei Hornet – Shoei’s top of the range dual-sports/adventure helmet, designed to work as a high quality full face helmet but with a nod towards off-roading. It’s a fibreglass-shelled helmet with many of the features you’d expect in a full face but with a detachable peak to keep the sun glare down.

Summary

Owners love the Shoei ADV. It’s well built using good quality materials and is comfortable with a great visor. The peak’s been very well designed so it’s useful without making it too top heavy or prone to buffeting. But don’t just take our word for it – it’s Ride magazine ‘recommended’ too. If you’re after an adventure helmet, the Shoei Hornet ADV may well be the one you’re looking for!

Fibreglass adventure full-face helmet

Not SHARP tested

Snell certified

Emergency quick release system

Double-D ring fastener

XXS-XXL

1.7Kg

5 year warranty

Expect to pay £450-£540

Looking to buy this Shoei?

We recommend SportsBikeShop (UK) and GetGeared (UK) for outstanding service and competitive prices with free delivery, or MotoIn (Ger) for a wide range and excellent € prices. You might also like to click through to the Shoei helmets pages at Amazon UK if you prefer to buy from there. Please click any link to drop onto their Shoei helmets pages or see here for info on our recommended stores.

Hornet ADV in gloss white

Safety

While it hasn’t been SHARP tested, Shoei have a great reputation for producing safe helmets. At the time of writing, they’re currently 6th in our top 10 safest helmet brands list and their three most recently tested fibreglass helmets (two full face and one flip-up) scored either four or five stars – so we expect the Hornet ADV to score similarly well. Of course, it’s been ECE approved (and in the US is both DOT and Snell certified) so you should be pretty confident it’ll perform as you hope it will in an accident.

Other things that contribute to safety – it’s made in 4 shell sizes (only premium helmets are made in 4 shell sizes), has multi-density polystyrene shock absorber inside and has a nice wide visor aperture with optically-correct visor. The fact that it’s made in four shells should mean the helmet is bang on for your fitment size, making it nice and compact and not too big for your body size.

All these features will arguably help improve safety either by making it perform better in an impact or helping avoid an accident in the first place.

I guess one slight safety concern is the peak. Many helmet manufacturers go to great lengths to make their helmets as round as possible – in fact it’s usually very prominently mentioned in all the bumf – especially from Aria. So, even though the peak on the Shoei is fitted with break-off screws to help it detach in an accident, it’s worth being aware that having anything jutting out may contribute to rotation of the helmet, which is something you very much don’t want in an accident!

Helmet Noise

While helmet noise is very subjective, the overall opinion is that the Shoei Hornet ADV is above average to good in suppressing noise. That’s in comparison to all helmets, which would be pretty good in itself; in fact one or two experienced adventure riders did comment that it’s the quietest adventure helmet they’d ever used.

Shoei have gone to great lengths in the wind tunnel to reduce buffeting – especially since they’ve got a peak to deal with, which are notorious for whistling and grabbing the air to buffet your head around (see below). They’ve also fitted sound-deadening ear pads inside the helmet to keep things quiet where cut-outs for speakers might sit. All in all, it seems to have worked.

Ventilation

Broadly the ventilation’s really good in all but the most extreme high temperatures when things can get a bit sticky. But then that can be a problem with most helmets.

Front view showing single chin vent and brow vents

From the front, the ADV doesn’t seem to have too many vents compared with other adventure crash helmets. It has a single chin vent and a thin brow vent. Both are pretty analogue (open/closed) and both can be a bit fiddly to use at first. There’s also a vent on the top of the head underneath the peak and operated by a small front/back slider.

In all but the hottest weather, most owners generally say the ventilation is good/great and keeps a nice amount of air circulating onto the visor and around the head, exiting from the rear of the helmet towards the top and around the collar. In cold weather, they can be closed to mostly shut out the draft, especially if the included nose guard and chin curtain are fitted.

Of course, do that and you start to have a problem with your visor fogging up. Thankfully, the Hornet ADV has a Pinlock-ready visor. Un-thankfully, that’s not supplied in the box, as it is when you buy one in the US – which is unusual because it’s actually usually the other way round! Hey ho, some you win, some you lose…

Visor

The visor’s a goodie. It’s optically correct (Shoei’s CNS-2 system), has a nice positive ratchet and the base plate is designed to pull and seal the visor when it’s closed. All good there. It’s also nice and wide with owners reporting you can barely see the edges out of your peripheral vision which is just as it should be. It’s also designed to cut out 99% of UV light too. Lots of ticks for the visor!

It’s Pinlock EVO ready too (that’s Pinlock’s latest standard) though you’ll have to stump up an extra £20+ for the insert (which we’d say is a must). We didn’t find a single owner who fitted a Pinlock say it didn’t do the job – so if you ride in cool climes, it’s gonna be well worth the price.

If you do take the Hornet ADV off road and like to wear goggles, then you’ll be pleased to hear not only will the Shoei take goggles, but you don’t need to remove the visor either. Fully-open the visor, shove on your goggles making sure the strap sits nicely in the groove around the rear of the helmet, and you’re good to go.

One final note on the visor is that if you want to change/remove the main visor, it doesn’t need removal of the peak first, like it’s precedessor (and many other adventure helmets) did. It’s actually a quick job to remove the peak itself – by turning the two screws a quarter of a turn then pressing down on the top of the helmet to pull it away. But when cleaning your visor is a drag, any time saved is welcome. That’s a good bit of design Shoei.

Top view of the removable peak

Peak

The Peak’s easily removable (see above) and while it’s not adjustable, a couple of owners who mentioned it said it’s angled just about right so they’d probably not change it even if they could.

It’s well designed too. Peaks can catch the wind and cause lots of head shaking at speed. But the Shoei engineers have carefully crafted the design, meaning if you’re on the motorway at speed, you’ll hardly notice the peak’s there. Most owners say at around 80, there’s really little difference between the Hornet ADV and a regular full face. Turn your head and you can feel a bit of tugging but generally – and considering you’ve a great wack-off peak sticking out of your lid – it’s amazingly well designed.

And if you spend a lot of time riding into the sun, then the peak’s a really welcome addition. Plus if you find you don’t use it much, you can pull it off and use the helmet as a full face. The only niggle there seems to be that it leaves a small hole in the top of the helmet and it doesn’t come with a bung to fill the space which may mean a bit of rain can get in. When you pay £400 for a helmet, it probably feels a bit wrong stuffing blu-tac or chewing gum into the hole to make it watertight!

Interior view of the Hornet ADV. Front red bands are for the EQRS

Comfort & Sizing

The Shoei Hornet ADV is essentially a high-quality full face helmet with a peak attached. And like pretty well all other Shoeis (and as long as you get the fitment right in the first place) it’s a nice comfortable place to put your head.

The interior is removable and washable and has what Shoei call its 3D Max dry liner which is essentially an antimicrobial and moisture-wicking fabric which Shoei claim pulls sweat away from the head twice as quickly as traditional nylon interiors. Owners seem happy with it. A few have a little grumble that the Hornet ADV is tight to pull on in the first place, but once on, it’s a nice fit and good for hours in the saddle.

One nice touch – and one that’ll hopefully never actually be useful to any owner (!) is that it has EQRS or emergency quick release cheek pads; there to help the emergency services more easily remove the cheek pads/helmet after an accident. It also helps when you’re wanting to remove the pads to clean them too of course – or change them if you’re trying to get your fitting just right because Shoei offer replacement cheek pads so you can tailor the fit more precisely to your head.

A couple of other things worth noting: The Shoei ADV comes with a nose guard and chin curtain in the box and the join between the cheek guard and top lining creates an internal glasses groove to help you slide your glasses in more easily and stop them digging into the side of your head when riding.

Graphics

Colours and designs for the ADV are limited – probably because the helmet’s a statement in itself and doesn’t need fancy graphics to show it off? There’s solid white and silver, and matt/gloss black. At the time of writing, there’s also the Seeker TC range which you can see around this page – in 3 colour variants.

Best place to buy this Shoei crash helmet?

If you want peace of mind when you buy,SportsBikeShop are based in the UK and offer outstanding service (9.8/10 on Trustpilot at the time of writing) including free delivery and 365 day refunds. They're competitively priced too and will match any online prices.

GetGeared are a recommended UK retailer with free delivery, a no-quibble 365 day returns policy (with free return postage) and with great online reviews scoring 4.8/5 on eKomi at the time of writing.

Motoin (Germany) get great feedback (4.7 on eTrustedshops at the time of writing) though note, there's a delivery charge to ship outside of Germany, so factor that in (see here for details).

Or you can jump through to Amazon UK if you prefer to buy from there - but make sure you only buy from the most reputable sellers.

Please click any picture below to visit their Shoei helmets pages. And if you buy from any store, we get a small sum from the sale at no extra cost to you - a massive THANKS! (it's how we finance the site). Click here for more info on our recommended retailers.

Shoei Hornet ADV Videos

Here’s a look around the helmet from the Revzilla dude – plus Shoei’s promo vid.

Other stuff – fastener, weight, communicator

Shoei Hornet ADV Seeker TC8 colours

The Hornet ADV comes with a double-d fastener. It weighs in at about 1.7Kg which is pretty weighty (the average full face for comparison is just under 1.5Kg) – though few of the owners actually complained that it felt too heavy which is, I guess, what actually counts.

Onto communication systems. The ADV has cut out pockets for speakers and most owners who fitted communicators that we found didn’t have much of a problem fitting theirs. One owner who fitted a Sena SMH10 said the speaker pockets were a little small and he struggled to route the wires. However owners fitting both a Scala G4 and a Sena 20S said it was a piece of cake and the speaker pockets were just right.

Alternatives to the Shoei Hornet ADV?

You might want to check out the X-Lite X-551 that’s a bit cheaper than the Hornet ADV and includes a drop down sun visor too. Or why not take a look at the Arai Tour X3 (or its successor the X4) that’s another premium helmet and, because it’s now obsolete, can be found at knock-down prices.

Looking to buy this Shoei?

We recommend SportsBikeShop (UK) and GetGeared (UK) for outstanding service and competitive prices with free delivery, or MotoIn (Ger) for a wide range and excellent € prices. You might also like to click through to the Shoei helmets pages at Amazon UK if you prefer to buy from there. Please click any link to drop onto their Shoei helmets pages or see here for info on our recommended stores.

Definitely want a Shoei?

Star Ratings

REVIEW OVERVIEW

Safety

Comfort

Noise

Features

Value

SUMMARY

The Shoei Hornet ADV is a great helmet that owners love. It's very well designed with a peak that works, an optically correct visor and that all-important Shoei build quality. It's a tad heavy (though owners don't seem to care) so if you're after an adventure or dual-sports helmet, then I'd put trying out the Shoei Hornet ADV at the top of your list!